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Ms. Dorsey "Doe-Doe" Steamer

Home:
905 N Avenue J #2503
Freeport, TX 77541

Work:
Brazosport I.S.D.
401 N Gulf Blvd
Freeport, Texas 77541
dorsey.steamer@brazosportisd.net

Home Phone: 979-201-2408
Work Phone: 979-730-7210
Fax: 979-237-6318
Email: dorsey.steamer@brazosportisd.net

Dorsey’s Living Memorial for the Yvette Girouard Tribute is followed by information she provided and the Spotlight on Former Athlete feature in March, 2016. Her LM was submitted on June 11, 2017 and posted by Dr. Ed Dugas that day.

Dorsey Steamer – Softball 1989-92, Track & Field 1993

My Coach – Yvette Girouard

Words will never do justice for exactly how much Coach Yvette Girouard means to me.

First of all, to take a chance on me coming to her USL Lady Cajun Softball program, when I hadn’t played softball in four years, said a lot about what she saw in this little Freeport, TX athlete.

She was patient, disciplined, encouraging, and above all the coach/parent that I needed to get through those years.

Through moments of rebellion to the understanding of dealing with my mom’s death, Coach G, has always had my back. She never allowed me to “cheat” or “fail” myself or my true potential.

To this day, she has been one of the ultimate catalyst behind many of my coaching and parenting philosophies.

She never “settled” for mediocrity in “US” and I pray that I can only scratch the surface of making an impact on someone else’s life like she has made in mine.

I truly thank God, DAILY, for allowing our paths to cross, our journeys to travel for awhile, and the releasing me to my destiny that only she could have molded and prepared me for.

I am a firm believer that when you claim something or someone, that they take part ownership… “stake” in your life. You are speaking into existence the setting up of footprints upon your heart that has helped to guide you in some of the most precious and momentous life highlights that one could ever experience.

She will always be “My Coach”, as she has always, l love and admire you, Coach Yvette Girouard….

“Cajun 4” Ever and Always!!!

* * * * *

Since the luxuries of college life, semi-pro and pro softball, and the awesome stint that I had coaching some very blessed and talented female athletes… I have pretty much settled down into being the best role model and mother that I can be to my boys.

At the present time, I am enjoying the family life with three sons: Dor’Vaughn Semaj O’Neal Steamer-16 yrs.
D’Arian Nikolaos O’Neal Steamer- 13 yrs.
D’Orien Nikoali O’Neal Steamer- 13 yrs.

For too long my boys traveled the softball countryside with me, being my biggest supporters…. Now I am blessed to sit back and enjoy being their “Number 1 Fan”.

Life has been an adventure as well as a true blessing!!! My advice…
“Enjoy every day of it…because it is only a temporary assignment.”

I want to thank God for all of the opportunities of meeting a great group of people, who’s impact will always have a bearing on my life. Not too many people can say that they have been truly blessed to really know the Yvette Girouards, Kyla Halls (Holas), Myra Moutons, and Heather Turnbows of the world … I can!

Much Love and May God “4”-Ever Bless & Keep Each and Every One of You!!!!

Love Ya Always!!!!
Dorsey M. Steamer
(Doe-Doe)

Lady Cajun #4 … ALWAYS!!!

Updated Feb. 17, 2016

* * * * *

March, 2016 Spotlight Feature
Spotlight on Former Athlete: Dorsey Steamer – Softball 1989-92, Track & Field 1993

Dorsey Steamer

UL Softball 1989-92

NFCA All-American: 1991; 1992, 1st Team

Career Steals: 149, 1st

Single Season Steals: 51, 1992; 35, 1989, 1990; 28, 1991

Career Triples: 18, 2nd

Team: 48-16, 1989; 44-8, 1990, 2nd in NCAA Regional; 33-10, 1991, NCAA Regional; 41-12, 1992, 2nd in NCAA Regional

UL Track & Field, 1993

Competed in javelin, hurdles, long jump, high jump

Steamer provided speed for Cajun softball

By Bruce Brown

Written for Athletic Network

Believe it or not, the UL softball program wasn’t always a fixture in NCAA Regional, Super Regional and Women’s World Series action.

It seems quite habitual now, but 25 years ago the program was still knocking on the door to join the elite.

Someone had to lay the groundwork for later success to come, and Dorsey Steamer was among those pioneers who showed the way for coach Yvette Girouard’s Ragin’ Cajun program.

“Those who went before us had laid the bricks down, and we put layers to that,” said Steamer, who went on to play professionally before establishing a coaching career at her hometown Brazosport High School in Freeport, Texas.

“Those before us set the tone. It was like a relay race, and they passed the baton to us.”

The Cajuns were 166-46 in Steamer’s four years of play from 1989-92, reaching NCAA Regional action the final three seasons and suffering heartbreaking losses to Florida State in regional finals in both 1990 and 1992.

Steamer was the straw who stirred the drink.

She carried the nickname Doe Doe in her Cajun playing days, but she could just as easily have been called SuperSonic for the uncommon speed she brought to the field.

In a career that featured a pair of NFCA All-America berths, Steamer set a school record for stolen bases with 149 – still 45 beyond the next Cajun. In 1992 alone, she executed 51 steals.

She also finished as the career leader in triples with 18, and is second on that list trailing only Lana Jimenez (Stokley).

“Dorsey was that missing piece for us, with her tremendous speed,” Girouard said. “I had never coached someone that fast. It’s almost as if she had another gear from home plate to first base.

“She gave us an added dimension, and quickly became a fan favorite.”

It was an era when many games were won 1-0, so having an added threat was a boon to any arsenal.

“With her on base, we didn’t have to bunt,” Girouard said. “What a weapon she was from that left side.”

Steamer didn’t have the green light to steal bases, despite her quickness. She stuck with Girouard’s system.

“I trusted her,” Steamer said. “I went when she was ready for me to go. I always waited for her signal.”

“I think we had Pat Murphy (coaching) at first base at the time, and he was pretty good at judging when to send her,” Girouard said. “My job was to stop her if I needed to.”

Obviously, that didn’t happen often.

“Back then, it was more of a speed game,” Steamer said. “We played ‘small ball.’ The bats didn’t bounce like they do today.

“Also, it’s a matter of mechanics. From high school to college, players are getting to learn so much earlier than we did. Pitchers are just as good, but hitters are built like linebackers now. It has expanded big-time.”

Once she settled into the program, Steamer felt right at ease with the Cajuns and their coach.

“Yvette was our mom away from home,” Steamer said. “She always went above and beyond to settle any problems. Whatever it took.

“We played one weekend in Houston, and my mom was getting to see me play (in college) for the first time, and I wasn’t myself. I committed errors. We exchanged words. She (Girouard) was so mad at me.

“My dad (James “Bubba” Steamer, instrumental in his daughter’s early growth in the sport) backed Yvette because I had disrespected my coach. Shortly after that, my mom went into a coma.

“Through it all Coach Girouard was right there. She makes you earn respect, but she doesn’t stop loving you, teaching you or caring about you.”

Steamer just missed the breakthrough year of 1993, when Girouard’s team finished third in the nation at the WCWS. Instead, she endured the “what if” years of near-misses.

“I remember the last play of the last game I played, when we had the chance to force another game,” Steamer said. “I made the throw from the outfield to the catcher, and we never made a play on it. Instead of the last out, it was the last safe. To me, it’s never over til it’s over.

“I think I stayed in my uniform for a long while afterwards. At some point, you figure you’re going to wake up and go out and play another game.”

With her softball eligibility played out, Steamer spent the 1993 spring competing for a Cajun women’s track and field squad that won the Sun Belt Conference crown. She threw the javelin, ran hurdles and was in the long jump and high jump.

“Our high school didn’t have softball,” she said. “I was thinking I would get an opportunity in basketball or track. They weren’t looking at women of color in softball. I had played softball since age 5, but it looked like it was off the table. Then UL offered. I fell in love with the place on my first visit and I thought why not go back to my first program and try to make a difference.”

So the handwriting was on the wall with the Cajuns.

Now, some 24 years after her final game, Steamer remains revered by teammates and long-time followers of the program.

“Dorsey really gets it,” Girouard said. “She values her time, and I think she realizes how formative her years at USL were for her whole life.”

“I keep in touch with teammates, and see Mike and Stefni (Lotief) when I’m in the area,” Steamer said. “When I went there, I felt I could make a difference some day in something that was going to take off. Look at it now.

“It’s fun to go to games and have people I’ve never met before say, ‘You’re Dorsey Steamer.’ It really blows my boys away that people remember me.

“USL was my second home, then I tell people I had to come back to save Freeport.”

Steamer has three sons – Dor’Vaughn, 16, and twins D’Arian and D’Orien, 13 – who are more interested in music than athletics, but she is happy to nurture the talents they have. They will help her decide her career timetable.

“I’ll coach at least four more years, until they’re finished high school,” she said. “It depends on their goals after graduation. I love it (coaching). They come out like an open book, and we’re their tomorrow.

“I tell the players what my grandmother used to say: If what you did yesterday is still big, (then) you’re not doing anything today.”

Clearly, Dorsey Steamer hadn’t slowed down yet.

* * * * * * *